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FACW_PSYC_2022_Thuermer_McCrea_Gollwitzer_RegulatingSelf-Defensiveness_inPress.pdf (670.16 kB)

Regulating self-defensiveness: If–then plans prevent claiming and creating performance handicaps

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posted on 2022-03-07, 22:17 authored by Lukas Thuermer, Sean M. McCreaSean M. McCrea, Peter Gollwitzer
Claiming or creating obstacles before performing important tasks (i.e., self-handicapping) is a costly strategy to protect the self from implications of poor outcomes. We predicted that forming an if-then plan (implementation intention) helps individuals overcome their performance-related worries and thus prevents self-handicapping behavior. In two experiments, all participants formed the goal to perform well on an upcoming task and learned the strategies to ignore worries and tell themselves “I can do it”, either in an if-then format (implementation intention) or not (control). The task was either described as an intelligence test (highly threatening) or as a perception style test (less threatening). Participants could then claim a self-handicap (report stress, Experiment 1) or behaviorally self-handicap (inadequately prepare, Experiment 2). As predicted, implementation intentions reduced claimed and behavioral self-handicapping to levels observed in the low-threat control conditions. Experiment 2 demonstrated these effects among chronic self-handicappers. Implications of these findings are discussed.

Funding

German Research Foundation grant DFG MC68/2-1

History

ISO

eng

Language

English

Publisher

Springer

Journal title

Motivation & Emotion

Volume number

37

Department

  • Psychology - PSYC

Usage metrics

    Psychology

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    Exports